Geoffrey Colman
Geoffrey Russell Rees Colman was an English cricketer active in first-class cricket from 1912 to 1924.
Colman was born at Norwich to Edith Margaret Davies and her husband Russell James Colman. He was educated at Eton College, before attending Christ Church, Oxford. While still attending Eton, Colman made his minor counties debut for Norfolk in the 1911 Minor Counties Championship, making three appearances in that season. His debut in first-class cricket came the following year for Oxford University against the touring South Africans at the Magdalen Ground, Oxford. Prior to the start of World War I, Colman made 22 first-class appearances for the university. Playing primarily as a right-handed batsman, Colman scored 946 runs, making one century score of 127 against Hampshire in 1913. He gained his Oxford blue in 1913.
With the onset of war, Colman enlisted in the British Army. He served in the 7th Battalion, The Rifles on the Western Front with the rank of second lieutenant. He later served in the Machine Gun Corps, achieving the rank of temporary captain in January 1917. During the course of the war he was severely wounded, which would affect him in later years.
Following the war, Colman married Lettice Elizabeth Evelyn Adeane on 25 February 1919, with the couple having five children. He also resumed playing minor counties cricket for Norfolk, representing his home county until 1930, with the wounds he sustained during the war curtailing his minor counties career. He made one final appearance in first-class cricket when he was selected to play for the combined Minor Counties cricket team in 1924 against the touring South Africans at the County Ground, Lakenham. This was his final appearance in first-class cricket. As a member of the Norwich Colman's family, he served as a company director until his death at Framingham Earl, Norfolk, on 18 March 1935, from endocarditis caused by a chest wound sustained during the war. After his death, the thatched pavilion at the County Ground in Lakenham was erected in his memory in 1936.